Bryce Harper stonewalls any talk of joining Yankees: 'I'm a National now'

The Yankees are in Washington for a two-game series. Bryce Harper is in Washington because he plays for the Nationals. You will never guess what happened next.

Harper is the most visible free agent of a loaded free agent class this offseason and figuring out his destination has been a major storyline in baseball this year. The Yankees media naturally had questions about Harper about the Yankees, and Harper naturally didn’t have many answers.

Bryce Harper shuts down all questions about joining Yankees

As Yankees reporters swarmed Harper to ask about the possibility of signing with the Yankees in free agency, the star took question after question and seemed to respond with the same refrain each time. Per MLB.com’s Jamal Collier, he answered that he is a National right now and he is only focused on this series when it comes to the Yankees.

Bryce Harper wasn’t biting on anything #Yankees-related today. “I’m a National now,” was his default response to that line of questioning.

Meanwhile, watching New York writers try to get Harper to bite on questions about his future and affinity for the Yankees was roughly as uncomfortable as I imagine it is watching me try to dodge my grandmother’s questions at holidays when she points out I’m not yet married.

Can’t comment on the latter part of this, but the first part of Chelsea’s tweet is accurate. Guys, he’s a National. He’s under contract. He’s trying to help his team win. He won’t answer your questions about whether he does or doesn’t want to be a Yankee. https://t.co/vCdR5aeKWL

This isn’t exactly surprising from Harper. He’s self-aware enough to understand any answer accepting the premise of possibly joining the Yankees would spread like wildfire and be a massive distraction for a team in desperate need of a deep playoff run.

Why are the Yankees seen as a destination for Bryce Harper?

Talk of Harper signing with the Yankees has been going on since before Harper’s MLB debut. Back in 2010, he told DC radio that he was a fan of the Yankees growing up (as well as the Cowboys, Lakers and Duke basketball; he might just like winning). That and the fact that he figures to command the biggest contract in MLB history were more than enough for Yankees fans to think they had the best shot of signing the phenom as a free agent.

What’s funny is that, more recently, the Yankees are looking less and less likely that they will need Harper’s services come 2019. They now have two of the best corner outfielders in baseball in Aaron Judge and Giancarlo Stanton, as well as plenty of depth. Unless someone wants to DH regularly, Harper might be a tight fit on a Yankees team that has leaned into relying on homegrown talent.

Bryce Harper is going to make a lot of money this winter. We just don’t know who’s going to give it to him. (AP Photo)

Harper, on if it matters which team he liked as a kid now that he's so old: "We have to do the things to keep track of what's important and that's winning ballgames…It doesn't matter who we're playing — if it's the Yankees, Cubs, Dodgers, Phillies, name it."